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Self-Publishing Is Easier Than You Have Heard
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Here's the most stupidly surprising thing I learned about self-publishing: It's really, really easy.
I say "stupidly surprising" because I feel like I should have realized this, and I'm obviously pretty behind the curve here considering how many people have embraced self-publishing and had a lot of success doing it.
But there's something about the publication process that seemed so daunting to me before I started. So many things to think about. So hard to get the word out. All those nuts and bolts that I've been glad for my publisher to handle.
At the end of the day, it just wasn't that hard. There are really only 6 things to worry about:
1. Writing the darn thing
This was by far the hardest part. When I started writing How to Write a Novel, I thought it was going to be a polished collection of blog posts. I had written so many posts over the years, surely I could just assemble it into book form?
I started stitching together blog posts... and it read like a collection of a blog posts. It didn't read like a book. There were a ton of holes. And it kind of sucked.
So I stated over. I extensively rewrote everything I originally sourced from the blog, and I added a lot of new material that's exclusively available in the book.
It was way harder and took a lot longer than I expected. I thought it was going to take a month. It took a year. Whoops.
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2. Getting it edited
This is where things started getting easier. There are so many incredible freelance editors out there, and I'm fortunate to be friends with some of them. I hired my friend Christine Pride to do the initial round of edits. She helped immensely with the shape of the book, and it was her idea to turn the chapter titles into "rules."
For copyediting and final polish I turned to Bryan Russell, who agreed to a barter edit since I've edited some of his work in the past (though I now owe him immensely because he's a way better editor than me).
I am extremely happy with how everything turned out.
3. Cover design
For the cover I turned to my friend and influential graphic designer Mari Sheibley, who may be sliiiiightly better known, among other things, for being Foursquare's first designer and creating so many of those awesome badges that were a huge part of Foursquare's success.
I'm going to blog about how I went about the cover process separately. It was really fun.
4. Interior design
I thought about trying to learn how to design the interior, but this is a corner I decided to cut. I reached out to a few interior designers for quotes, and ended up going with D. Robert Pease, who happens to also be a blog reader, and he was incredibly fast, professional, and the end result looked terrific. He provided me with files in every format I needed.
Piece of cake.
5. Getting everything uploaded
I distributed directly via Kindle, B&N, Kobo, and used the e-distributor Smashwords for everything else. When the print cover was ready I distributed with CreateSpace. Easy easy easy.
How easy? I finished writing and editing the guide about a week before it was on sale.
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6. Promotions
I plugged the guide through the blog, I was fortunate to have some really nice blurbs, and I've been experimenting with some social media ads.
I haven't really gone all out with promoting off of my blog as I would have liked, but the great thing is that it's never too late.
This is a bit of a simplification, obviously, and if you have any questions about the specifics of self-publishing process I relied heavily on Susan Kaye Quinn, The Creative Penn, and David Gaughran.
I still think there are many merits to traditional publication, but if you're holding back from self-publishing because it seems daunting, don't sweat it. It's really not that hard.
Self-publishing veterans, how did you find the process? Am I just late to the party?